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CSCE 330
Programming Language Structures
Chapter 1: Introduction
Spring 2006
Marco Valtorta
[email protected]
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Textbooks
• Ghezzi and Jazayeri
– The main textbook
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History and general concepts
Syntax and semantics
Imperative languages
Functional languages
Declarative languages
• Ullman
– In-depth coverage of the functional language
ML-97
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Disclaimer
• The slides are based on the textbooks and other
sources, including several other fine textbooks for
the Programming Language (PL) Concepts course
• The PL Concepts course covers topics PL1 through
PL11 in Computing Curricula 2001
• One or more PL Concepts course is almost
universally a part of a Computer Science
curriculum
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Why Study PL Concepts?
1. Increased capacity to express ideas
2. Improved background for choosing appropriate
languages
3. Increased ability to learn new languages
4. Better understanding of the significance of
implementation
5. Increased ability to design new languages
6. Background for compiler writing
7. Overall advancement of computing
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Improved background for choosing
appropriate languages
•
Source: http://www.dilbert.com/comics/dilbert/archive/dilbert-20050823.html
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Software Development Process
• Three models of the Software Development
process:
– Waterfall Model
– Spiral Model
– RUDE
• Run, Understand, Debug, and Edit
• Different languages provide different degrees of
support for the three models
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
The Waterfall Model
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Requirements analysis and specification
Software design and specification
Implementation (coding)
Certification:
– Verification: “Are we building the product
right?”
– Validation: “Are we building the right product?”
– Module testing
– Integration testing
– Quality assurance
• Maintenance and refinement
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
PLs as Components of a Software
Development Environment
• Goal: software productivity
• Need: support for all phases of SD
• Computer-aided tools (“Software Tools”)
– Text and program editors, compilers, linkers,
libraries, formatters, pre-processors
– E.g., Unix (shell, pipe, redirection)
• Software development environments
– E.g., Interlisp, JBuilder
• Intermediate approach:
– Emacs (customizable editor to lightweight SDE)
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
PLs as Algorithm Description Languages
• Most people consider a programming language
merely as code with the sole purpose of
constructing software for computers to run.
However, a language is a computational model,
and programs are formal texts amenable to
mathematical reasoning. The model must be
defined so that its semantics are delineated
without reference to an underlying mechanism, be
it physical or abstract.
• Niklaus Wirth, “Good Ideas, through the Looking
Glass,” Computer, January 2006, pp.28-39.
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Influences on PL Design
• Software design methodology (“People”)
– Need to reduce the cost of software
development
• Computer architecture (“Machines”)
– Efficiency in execution
• A continuing tension
• The machines are winning
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Software Design Methodology and
PLs
• Example of convergence of software design
methodology and PLs:
– Separation of concerns (a cognitive principle)
– Divide and conquer (an algorithm design technique)
– Information hiding (a software development method)
– Data abstraction facilities, embodied in PL constructs
such as:
• SIMULA 67 class, Modula 2 module, Ada package,
Smalltalk class, CLU cluster, C++ class, Java class
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Abstraction
• Abstraction is the process of identifying the important
qualities or properties of a phenomenon being modeled
• Programming languages are abstractions from the
underlying physical processor: they implement “virtual
machines”
• Programming languages are also the tools with which the
programmer can implement the abstract models
• Symbolic naming per se is a powerful abstracting
mechanism: the programmer is freed from concerns of a
bookkeeping nature
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Data Abstraction
• In early languages, fixed sets of data abstractions,
application-type specific (FORTRAN, COBOL, ALGOL 60),
or generic (PL/1)
• In ALGOL 68, Pascal, and SIMULA 67 Programmer can
define new abstractions
• Procedures (concrete operations) related to data types: the
SIMULA 67 class
• In Abstract Data Types (ADTs),
– representation is associated to concrete operations
– the representation of the new type is hidden from the
units that use the new type
• Protecting the representation from attempt to manipulating
it directly allows for ease of modification.
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Control Abstraction
• Control refers to the order in which statements or
groups of statements (program units) are executed
• From sequencing and branching (jump, jumpt) to
structured control statements (if…then…else, while)
• Subprograms and unnamed blocks
– methods are subprograms with an implicit argument
(this)
– unnamed blocks cannot be called
• Exception handling
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Non-sequential Execution
• Coroutines
– allow interleaved (not parallel!) execution
– can resume each other
• local data for each coroutine is not lost
• Concurrent units are executed in parallel
– allow truly parallel execution
– motivated by Operating Systems concerns, but
becoming more common in other applications
– require specialized synchronization statements
• Coroutines impose a total order on actions when a partial
order would suffice
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Computer Architecture and PLs
• Von Neumann architecture
– a memory with data and instructions, a control
unit, and a CPU
– fetch-decode-execute cycle
– the Von Neumann bottleneck
• Von Neumann architecture influenced early
programming languages
– sequential step-by-step execution
– the assignment statement
– variables as named memory locations
– iteration as the mode of repetition
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Other Computer Architectures
• Harvard
– separate data and program memories
• Functional architectures
– Symbolics, Lambda machine, Mago’s reduction machine
• Logic architectures
– Fifth generation computer project (1982-1992) and the
PIM
• Overall, alternate computer architectures have failed
commercially
– von Neumann machines get faster too quickly!
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Language Design Goals
• Reliability
– writability
– readability
– simplicity
– safety
– robustness
• Maintainability
– factoring
– locality
• Efficiency
– execution efficiency
– referential transparency and optimization
• optimizability: “the preoccupation with optimization should be removed from
the early stages of programming… a series of [correctness-preserving and]
efficiency-improving transformations should be supported by the language”
[Ghezzi and Jazayeri]
– software development process efficiency
• effectiveness in the production of software
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Language Translation
• A source program in some source language is translated into an
object program in some target language
• An assembler translates from assembly language to machine
language
• A compiler translates from a high-level language into a low-level
language
– the compiler is written in its implementation language
• An interpreter is a program accepts a source program and runs it
immediately
• An interpretive compiler translates a source program into an
intermediate language, and the resulting object program is then
executed by an interpreter
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Example of Language Translators
• Compilers for Fortran, COBOL, C
• Interpretive compilers for Pascal (P-Code) and
Java (Java Virtual Machine)
• Interpreters for APL and (early) LISP
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Some Historical Perspective
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Plankalkül (Konrad Zuse, 19431945)
FORTRAN (John Backus, 1956)
LISP (John McCarthy, 1960)
ALGOL 60 (Transatlantic
Committee, 1960)
COBOL (US DoD Committee, 1960)
APL (Iverson, 1962)
BASIC (Kemeny and Kurz, 1964)
PL/I (IBM, 1964)
SIMULA 67 (Nygaard and Dahl,
1967)
ALGOL 68 (Committee, 1968)
Pascal (Niklaus Wirth, 1971)
C (Dennis Ritchie, 1972)
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Prolog (Alain Colmerauer, 1972)
Smalltalk (Alan Kay, 1972)
FP (Backus, 1978)
Ada (UD DoD and Jean Ichbiah,
1983)
C++ (Stroustrup, 1983)
Modula-2 (Wirth, 1985)
Delphi (Borland, 1988?)
Modula-3 (Cardelli, 1989)
ML (Robin Milner, 1985?)
Eiffel (Bertrand Meyer, 1992)
Java (Sun and James Gosling,
1993?)
C# (Microsoft, 2001?)
Scripting languages such as Perl,
etc.
Etc.
Department of Computer Science and Engineering